Clinical trial shows steroid treatment can help brain infection

Clinical trial shows steroid treatment can help brain infection

The DexEnceph study is the most definitive evidence so far on whether corticosteroids should be used alongside antiviral drug aciclovir for severe brain infections.

A UK clinical trial has shown that corticosteroid dexamethasone along with standard antiviral treatment for encephalitis, caused by herpes simplex virus (HSV) does not improve long-term outcomes overall, although early use may lead to better recovery, and the treatment is safe for patients in whom encephalitis is suspected.

The DexEnceph study, led by researchers at The Pandemic Institute, the University of Liverpool and Walton Centre NHS Foundation Trust in partnership with Encephalitis International and research teams around the country, provides the most definitive evidence so far on whether corticosteroids should be used alongside antiviral drug aciclovir for this severe brain infection.

HSV encephalitis is the most common sporadic viral encephalitis worldwide. Although aciclovir has transformed survival since the 1970s, many survivors are left with long-term cognitive difficulties, especially memory problems.

The DexEnceph study was funded by the Efficacy and Mechanism Evaluation (EME) Programme, a partnership between the National Institute for Health and Care Research (NIHR) and the UKRI Medical Research Council (MRC), and the trial results are published today (21 January 2026) in the Lancet Neurology.

Safe to give steroids 

The multi-centre, randomised, observer blind Phase 3 trial enrolled 94 patients across 53 NHS hospitals. Participants received either dexamethasone plus aciclovir or aciclovir alone.

The primary outcome, verbal memory at 26 weeks, assessed using the Wechsler Memory Scale, showed no significant difference overall between the two groups.

Although dexamethasone did not improve overall outcomes, an exploratory analysis showed that when steroids were given earlier in the course of illness, patients tended to do better. The trial also demonstrated that dexamethasone is safe for patients with HSV encephalitis.

Corticosteroids are already used in other inflammatory brain diseases, such as autoimmune encephalitis. Evidence that dexamethasone is safe in HSV encephalitis suggests it could be considered early in all patients with suspected encephalitis, before the cause is confirmed.

“Increasingly, when patients present with encephalitis, clinicians want to give corticosteroids in case it is an autoimmune encephalitis, but until they have ruled out herpes simplex virus encephalitis, they have not felt it was safe to do so,” said Tom Solomon, chief investigator of DexEnceph and director of The Pandemic Institute. 

“This study shows that if you suspect a patient has encephalitis which might be autoimmune or could be HSV, it is safe to give steroids. The fact that early corticosteroid use seems to be associated with improved outcome may well encourage doctors to do this as soon as they see the patient,” he added. 

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